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u
Hood Canal
Thursday, March 1
High .................. 4:35
Low ................. 10:19
High .................. 2:54
Low ................... 9:42
Friday, March 2
High .................. 5:00
Low ................. 10:51
High .................. 3:43
Low ................. 10:21
Saturday, March 3
High .................. 5:19
Low ................. 11:19
High .................. 4:27
Low ................. 10:55
Sunday, March 4
High .................. 5:34
Low ................. 11:46
High .................. 5:10
Low ................. 11:28
Monday, March 5
at Union
a.m ........... 12.1 ft.
a.m ............. 6.4 ft.
p.m ........... 10.1 ft.
p.m ........... -0.1 ft.
a.m ........... 12.0 ft.
a.m ............. 5.6 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 0.3 ft.
a.m ........... 12.0 ft.
a.m ............. 4.8 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 0.8 ft.
a.m ........... 11.9 ft.
a.m ............. 4.0 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 1.6 ft.
High .................. 5:51 a.m ........... 11.9 ft.
Low ................. 12:13 p.m ............. 3.1 ft,
High .................. 5:53 p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
Tuesday, March 6
Low ................. 12:00 a.m ............. 2.7 ft.
High .................. 6:10 a.m ........... 11.8 ft.
Low ................. 12:42 p.m ............. 2.4 ft.
High .................. 6:37 p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
Wednesday, March 7
Low ................. 12:33 a.m ............. 3.9 ft.
High .................. 6:32
Low ................... 1:13
High .................. 7:24
Thursday, March 8
Low ................... 1:07
High .................. 6:56
Low ................... 1:48
High .................. 8:14
a.m ........... 11.7 ft.
p.m ............. 1.6 ft.
p.m ........... 10.1 ft.
a.rn ............. 5.1 ft.
a.m ........... 11.4 ft.
p.m ............. 1.2 ft.
p.m ........... 10.0 ft.
Oakland Bay at Shelton
Thursday, March 1
High .................. 6:00 a.m ........... 14.7 ft.
Low ................. 12:14 p.rn ............. 5.6 ft.
High .................. 4:19 p.m ........... 12.3 ft.
Low ................. 11:37 p.m ........... -0.2 ft.
Friday, March 2
High .................. 6:25 a.m ........... 14.6 ft.
Low ................. 12:46 p.m ............. 4.8 ft.
High .................. 5:08 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Saturday, March 3
Low ................. 12:16 a.m ............. 0.2 ft,
High .................. 6:44 a.m ........... 14.6 ft.
Low ................... 1:14 p.m ............. 4.2 ft.
High .................. 5:52 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Sunday, March 4
Low ................. 12:50 a.m ............. 0.7 ft.
High .................. 6:59 a.m ........... 14.4 ft.
Low ................... 1:41 p.m ............. 3.4 ft.
High .................. 6:35 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Monday, March 5
Low ................... 1:23 a.m ............. 1.4 ft.
High .................. 7:16 a.m ........... 14.4 ft.
Low ................... 2:08 p.m ............. 2.7 ft.
High .................. 7:18 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Tuesday, March 6
Low ................... 1:55 a.m ............. 2.3 ft.
High .................. 7:35 a.m ........... 14.3 ft.
Low ................... 2:37 p.m ............. 2.1 ft.
High .................. 8:02 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Wednesday, March 7
Low ................... 2:28 a.m ............. 3.4 ft.
High .................. 7:57 a.m ........... 14.2 ft.
Low ................... 3:08 p.m ............. 1.4 ft.
High .................. 8:49 p.m ........... 12.3 ft.
Thursday, March 8
Low ................... 3:02 a.rn ............. 4.5 ft.
High .................. 8:21 a.m ........... 13.8 ft.
Low ................... 3:43 p.m ............. 1.1 ft.
High .................. 9:39 p.m ........... 12.2 ft.
Cloquallum trees
due for trimming
Crews employed by PUD 3 will
be conducting a tree-trimming
project along Cloquallum Road
west of Shelton beginning today.
They will be working in an area
from Lake Isabella Loop Road to
Wivell Road that includes sur-
rounding roadways. Tree trimming
and removal will begin March 1
and continue for approximately
two weeks. Motorists may experi-
ence some traffic delays from time
to time.
Tree trimming and other ef-
forts at what officials of the pub-
lic utility district term "vegetation
Hunters can get
deer, elk permits
Deer and elk hunters have until
March 31 to enter their names in
a drawing Ibr this year's multiple-
season hunt.
Applicants who qualify for the
drawing will be eligible to pur-
chase a special permit allowing
them to participate in archery,
muzzleloader and modern-firearm
general hunting seasons for deer
or elk in 2007.
Those "selected must follow all
rules in effect for each season.
Hunters can apply only once for
each species and are limited to
harvesting one deer or elk. The
Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife will randomly draw
names in April for 1,500 multiple-
season deer permits, and 500 mul-
tiple-season elk permits.
"This is a great opportunity for
hunters to extend their hunting
season this fall," said Dave Ware,
a game manager.
Washington State residents se-
lected for the special permits must
purchase a $164.25 multiple-sea-
son tag, along with a regular hunt-
ing license, to participate in the
special hunt.
For more infbrmation, visit the
Web site at httpd/wdfw.wa.gov
or call 360-902-2464.
management" minimize the loss of
power and speed up restoration of
electricity during outages. PUD 3
has 657 miles of overhead power-
lines in its service area that need
to be protected from tree limbs and
overgrown vegetation. Working on
a six-year cycle, the public power
agency has a goal of clearing ap-
proximately 100 miles of right-of-
way each year.
The PUD has two in-house tree-
trimming crews that are constant-
ly on the move to keep trees away
from powerlines. During the sum-
mer their efforts are supplemented
by a contract tree-trimming crew
and a slashing crew.
People with powerlines running
through their property are asked
to consider if there are any danger
trees that could potentially fall
into the lines. In such cases they
can contact PUD 3 about their
concerns by calling 426-8255, Ex-
tension 3237.
Chamlu Bhimni, M.D,
Internal Medicine
(360) 427-8940
Board Cefied
Internal Medicine
John ¥. Buffet, M.D.
Family Practice
SheRon Family Medicine
(31Y)) 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice
FULL SERVICE
AUTO REPAIR
Specializing in
brakes, exhaust
and custom work
FREE ESTIMATES
Ikmnl¢ J. Davis, M.D.
& FLUID CHECKS
Shelton Family Medicine
"Quality and Trust -- ()60)426.26s3
That's Hometowne Ce0000ed
Family Practice
Service"
i
Page 22 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, March 1, 2007
Shelton looking to read
(Continued from page 19.)
Barnard uses Read Right at
CHOICE Alternative School. Read
Right was developed by Dr. Dee
Tadlock of Shelton and has been
a staple in Barnard's classes for
15 years. Her students read while
listening to a tape recording of the
text before them, then read aloud
to the teacher.
"Once they can get comfortable
with reading and get confidence and
build their vocabulary, they take
off. They do fine," Barnard said.
She is something of an author-
ity when it comes to teens ho
have had trouble digesting the
written word. Barnard was named
2005 Teacher of the Year in Wash-
ington and a finalist for national
Teacher of the Year. Barnard
blushes at the suggestion that her
teenage students might regard
her as a mother figure, but at the
same time she admits that the
Read Right method simulates the
bedtime stories that a book-loving
mom reads to her chiht.
"I THINK THE most impor-
tant thing is they need to be read
to and they need to hear books
over and over again," she said of
her charges.
Recent research into the mak-
ing of a young reader puts a pre-
mium on "phonemic awareness," a
phrase that describes a youngster's
ability to recognize that a word
may be broken down into its com-
ponent sounds. Phonemic aware-
ness of the ABCs of apples, beans
and carrots helps a child link the
look of a word on the printed page
to the sound of a word in an elder's
voice. "If people don't have that
they have a heck of a time learn-
ing to read," Barnard said.
Her students are making prog-
ress, and her voice is one that
echoes that of Dianne Lenning
and the "20 minutes a day" cam-
paign. "Part of the program is that
they're reading at home and that
they increase their love for read-
ing, and for some of them that's
the hardest part," Barnard said.
The hardest part was made a
little easier thanks to a little help
from two Barnard boosters: First
Book and the people who selected
her as the Teacher of the Year.
FIRST BOOK of Mason Coun-
ty was established by Lenning and
others in 1997. Working with Head
Start, Even Start, Mason County
Literacy and Save Our County's
Kids, it has put thousands of books
into the hands of hundreds of chil-
dren living hereabouts. This year
and last First Book gave grants of
$500 to Barnard for the purpose
of taking some of her students on
a couple of field trips to Borders
Books.
"They browsed and they sat and
read and they traded books," she
said.
Barnard also took the field-trip-
pers out to lunch and picked up the
tab with a gift of money she'd re-
ceived as Teacher of the Year. The
grants from First Book allowed for
the purchase of some books by the
teens who went on the trip and
others for their classmates back in
Shelton who didn't get a chance to
go. "One student wanted The Re-
port Card, a book she started read-
ing in juvenile hall," Barnard said.
"That, quite honestly, is where a
fw of our kids read the most be-
cause there's nothing else to do
there but read."
As it happens "juvenile hall" is
shorthand for the Mason
Juvenile Detention
lockup for kids who have
crosswise of the law, and
port Card is a novel by
Clements about a girl
grades on purpose to
grades aren't
titles favored by the
are Speak by Laurie
son, The Secret Garden
Hodgson Burnet, Go Ask
an anonymous author The
terhood of the
Ann Brashares, Hatchet b)
Paulsen and Snowboa
zine.
"ONE GIRL
with it that she
Borders. She said when there
tra money they will go to the
store, and that was huge,
nard said.
First Book also
books for the babies of teen
who went on the
same time the kids who
babies are also invited to do
part to spread the word
books. "I really try to
them to read to their
ers and sisters," Barnard
Doyle described First
Mason County as "part of
work of First Book
who provide new books
in need in communities
country." A tax-deductible
bution of $25 covers the
books.
We deliver
EATING IL
COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES!
carry kerosene. Located at Sanderson
Industrial Park
¢coo0oo, 427-80
CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
TODAY!
I Hendryx, M.D.
Family Practice
Olympic Physicians. P.L.L.C.
(360) 426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Family Practice
Pu Hoe, M.D.
Family Practice
North Mason Medical Clinic
(360) 426-8405
Board Certified
Familv Practice
Deuldas F. Undahl, D,O.
Internal Medicine
Olympic Physicians, P.LLC.
(360) 426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Allen L. Milllrd, M.D.
Family Practice
5helton Family Medicine
Chdstoph W. Pmoyur
D.O., F.A.A.F.P
Family Practice
(360) 426-3862
Board Certified
Family Practice
Jou Jdr,T. IIJ, M.D.
Internal Medicine
North Mason Medical Clinic
(350) 426-8405
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Mm L $¢hlaud,mff, M.D.
Internal Medicine
Olympic Physicians. P.L.L.C.
(360)426-2500
www.olym piclYsicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Dimnm E. Vdikovl, M,D.
Intemal Medicine
Olympic Physicians. P.L.LC
(360)426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Timothy J. Wd,
Family Practice
Shelton Family M ljci
(360} 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice
Doris H, Wib, $'p'
Family Practice ,_.
Shelton Family MecliOm
(360) 426-2633
(360) 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice ..... --" " l
uenerm Hosplta
JrlCc. mhccJtCd
901 Mt Vv Ddve
(360:
'r Physician Refeffal Li
S
cneditation of He.alchcane
00ide$
u
Hood Canal
Thursday, March 1
High .................. 4:35
Low ................. 10:19
High .................. 2:54
Low ................... 9:42
Friday, March 2
High .................. 5:00
Low ................. 10:51
High .................. 3:43
Low ................. 10:21
Saturday, March 3
High .................. 5:19
Low ................. 11:19
High .................. 4:27
Low ................. 10:55
Sunday, March 4
High .................. 5:34
Low ................. 11:46
High .................. 5:10
Low ................. 11:28
Monday, March 5
at Union
a.m ........... 12.1 ft.
a.m ............. 6.4 ft.
p.m ........... 10.1 ft.
p.m ........... -0.1 ft.
a.m ........... 12.0 ft.
a.m ............. 5.6 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 0.3 ft.
a.m ........... 12.0 ft.
a.m ............. 4.8 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 0.8 ft.
a.m ........... 11.9 ft.
a.m ............. 4.0 ft.
p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
p.m ............. 1.6 ft.
High .................. 5:51 a.m ........... 11.9 ft.
Low ................. 12:13 p.m ............. 3.1 ft,
High .................. 5:53 p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
Tuesday, March 6
Low ................. 12:00 a.m ............. 2.7 ft.
High .................. 6:10 a.m ........... 11.8 ft.
Low ................. 12:42 p.m ............. 2.4 ft.
High .................. 6:37 p.m ........... 10.2 ft.
Wednesday, March 7
Low ................. 12:33 a.m ............. 3.9 ft.
High .................. 6:32
Low ................... 1:13
High .................. 7:24
Thursday, March 8
Low ................... 1:07
High .................. 6:56
Low ................... 1:48
High .................. 8:14
a.m ........... 11.7 ft.
p.m ............. 1.6 ft.
p.m ........... 10.1 ft.
a.rn ............. 5.1 ft.
a.m ........... 11.4 ft.
p.m ............. 1.2 ft.
p.m ........... 10.0 ft.
Oakland Bay at Shelton
Thursday, March 1
High .................. 6:00 a.m ........... 14.7 ft.
Low ................. 12:14 p.rn ............. 5.6 ft.
High .................. 4:19 p.m ........... 12.3 ft.
Low ................. 11:37 p.m ........... -0.2 ft.
Friday, March 2
High .................. 6:25 a.m ........... 14.6 ft.
Low ................. 12:46 p.m ............. 4.8 ft.
High .................. 5:08 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Saturday, March 3
Low ................. 12:16 a.m ............. 0.2 ft,
High .................. 6:44 a.m ........... 14.6 ft.
Low ................... 1:14 p.m ............. 4.2 ft.
High .................. 5:52 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Sunday, March 4
Low ................. 12:50 a.m ............. 0.7 ft.
High .................. 6:59 a.m ........... 14.4 ft.
Low ................... 1:41 p.m ............. 3.4 ft.
High .................. 6:35 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Monday, March 5
Low ................... 1:23 a.m ............. 1.4 ft.
High .................. 7:16 a.m ........... 14.4 ft.
Low ................... 2:08 p.m ............. 2.7 ft.
High .................. 7:18 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Tuesday, March 6
Low ................... 1:55 a.m ............. 2.3 ft.
High .................. 7:35 a.m ........... 14.3 ft.
Low ................... 2:37 p.m ............. 2.1 ft.
High .................. 8:02 p.m ........... 12.4 ft.
Wednesday, March 7
Low ................... 2:28 a.m ............. 3.4 ft.
High .................. 7:57 a.m ........... 14.2 ft.
Low ................... 3:08 p.m ............. 1.4 ft.
High .................. 8:49 p.m ........... 12.3 ft.
Thursday, March 8
Low ................... 3:02 a.rn ............. 4.5 ft.
High .................. 8:21 a.m ........... 13.8 ft.
Low ................... 3:43 p.m ............. 1.1 ft.
High .................. 9:39 p.m ........... 12.2 ft.
Cloquallum trees
due for trimming
Crews employed by PUD 3 will
be conducting a tree-trimming
project along Cloquallum Road
west of Shelton beginning today.
They will be working in an area
from Lake Isabella Loop Road to
Wivell Road that includes sur-
rounding roadways. Tree trimming
and removal will begin March 1
and continue for approximately
two weeks. Motorists may experi-
ence some traffic delays from time
to time.
Tree trimming and other ef-
forts at what officials of the pub-
lic utility district term "vegetation
Hunters can get
deer, elk permits
Deer and elk hunters have until
March 31 to enter their names in
a drawing Ibr this year's multiple-
season hunt.
Applicants who qualify for the
drawing will be eligible to pur-
chase a special permit allowing
them to participate in archery,
muzzleloader and modern-firearm
general hunting seasons for deer
or elk in 2007.
Those "selected must follow all
rules in effect for each season.
Hunters can apply only once for
each species and are limited to
harvesting one deer or elk. The
Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife will randomly draw
names in April for 1,500 multiple-
season deer permits, and 500 mul-
tiple-season elk permits.
"This is a great opportunity for
hunters to extend their hunting
season this fall," said Dave Ware,
a game manager.
Washington State residents se-
lected for the special permits must
purchase a $164.25 multiple-sea-
son tag, along with a regular hunt-
ing license, to participate in the
special hunt.
For more infbrmation, visit the
Web site at httpd/wdfw.wa.gov
or call 360-902-2464.
management" minimize the loss of
power and speed up restoration of
electricity during outages. PUD 3
has 657 miles of overhead power-
lines in its service area that need
to be protected from tree limbs and
overgrown vegetation. Working on
a six-year cycle, the public power
agency has a goal of clearing ap-
proximately 100 miles of right-of-
way each year.
The PUD has two in-house tree-
trimming crews that are constant-
ly on the move to keep trees away
from powerlines. During the sum-
mer their efforts are supplemented
by a contract tree-trimming crew
and a slashing crew.
People with powerlines running
through their property are asked
to consider if there are any danger
trees that could potentially fall
into the lines. In such cases they
can contact PUD 3 about their
concerns by calling 426-8255, Ex-
tension 3237.
Chamlu Bhimni, M.D,
Internal Medicine
(360) 427-8940
Board Cefied
Internal Medicine
John ¥. Buffet, M.D.
Family Practice
SheRon Family Medicine
(31Y)) 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice
FULL SERVICE
AUTO REPAIR
Specializing in
brakes, exhaust
and custom work
FREE ESTIMATES
Ikmnl¢ J. Davis, M.D.
& FLUID CHECKS
Shelton Family Medicine
"Quality and Trust -- ()60)426.26s3
That's Hometowne Ce0000ed
Family Practice
Service"
i
Page 22 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, March 1, 2007
Shelton looking to read
(Continued from page 19.)
Barnard uses Read Right at
CHOICE Alternative School. Read
Right was developed by Dr. Dee
Tadlock of Shelton and has been
a staple in Barnard's classes for
15 years. Her students read while
listening to a tape recording of the
text before them, then read aloud
to the teacher.
"Once they can get comfortable
with reading and get confidence and
build their vocabulary, they take
off. They do fine," Barnard said.
She is something of an author-
ity when it comes to teens ho
have had trouble digesting the
written word. Barnard was named
2005 Teacher of the Year in Wash-
ington and a finalist for national
Teacher of the Year. Barnard
blushes at the suggestion that her
teenage students might regard
her as a mother figure, but at the
same time she admits that the
Read Right method simulates the
bedtime stories that a book-loving
mom reads to her chiht.
"I THINK THE most impor-
tant thing is they need to be read
to and they need to hear books
over and over again," she said of
her charges.
Recent research into the mak-
ing of a young reader puts a pre-
mium on "phonemic awareness," a
phrase that describes a youngster's
ability to recognize that a word
may be broken down into its com-
ponent sounds. Phonemic aware-
ness of the ABCs of apples, beans
and carrots helps a child link the
look of a word on the printed page
to the sound of a word in an elder's
voice. "If people don't have that
they have a heck of a time learn-
ing to read," Barnard said.
Her students are making prog-
ress, and her voice is one that
echoes that of Dianne Lenning
and the "20 minutes a day" cam-
paign. "Part of the program is that
they're reading at home and that
they increase their love for read-
ing, and for some of them that's
the hardest part," Barnard said.
The hardest part was made a
little easier thanks to a little help
from two Barnard boosters: First
Book and the people who selected
her as the Teacher of the Year.
FIRST BOOK of Mason Coun-
ty was established by Lenning and
others in 1997. Working with Head
Start, Even Start, Mason County
Literacy and Save Our County's
Kids, it has put thousands of books
into the hands of hundreds of chil-
dren living hereabouts. This year
and last First Book gave grants of
$500 to Barnard for the purpose
of taking some of her students on
a couple of field trips to Borders
Books.
"They browsed and they sat and
read and they traded books," she
said.
Barnard also took the field-trip-
pers out to lunch and picked up the
tab with a gift of money she'd re-
ceived as Teacher of the Year. The
grants from First Book allowed for
the purchase of some books by the
teens who went on the trip and
others for their classmates back in
Shelton who didn't get a chance to
go. "One student wanted The Re-
port Card, a book she started read-
ing in juvenile hall," Barnard said.
"That, quite honestly, is where a
fw of our kids read the most be-
cause there's nothing else to do
there but read."
As it happens "juvenile hall" is
shorthand for the Mason
Juvenile Detention
lockup for kids who have
crosswise of the law, and
port Card is a novel by
Clements about a girl
grades on purpose to
grades aren't
titles favored by the
are Speak by Laurie
son, The Secret Garden
Hodgson Burnet, Go Ask
an anonymous author The
terhood of the
Ann Brashares, Hatchet b)
Paulsen and Snowboa
zine.
"ONE GIRL
with it that she
Borders. She said when there
tra money they will go to the
store, and that was huge,
nard said.
First Book also
books for the babies of teen
who went on the
same time the kids who
babies are also invited to do
part to spread the word
books. "I really try to
them to read to their
ers and sisters," Barnard
Doyle described First
Mason County as "part of
work of First Book
who provide new books
in need in communities
country." A tax-deductible
bution of $25 covers the
books.
We deliver
EATING IL
COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES!
carry kerosene. Located at Sanderson
Industrial Park
¢coo0oo, 427-80
CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
TODAY!
I Hendryx, M.D.
Family Practice
Olympic Physicians. P.L.L.C.
(360) 426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Family Practice
Pu Hoe, M.D.
Family Practice
North Mason Medical Clinic
(360) 426-8405
Board Certified
Familv Practice
Deuldas F. Undahl, D,O.
Internal Medicine
Olympic Physicians, P.LLC.
(360) 426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Allen L. Milllrd, M.D.
Family Practice
5helton Family Medicine
Chdstoph W. Pmoyur
D.O., F.A.A.F.P
Family Practice
(360) 426-3862
Board Certified
Family Practice
Jou Jdr,T. IIJ, M.D.
Internal Medicine
North Mason Medical Clinic
(350) 426-8405
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Mm L $¢hlaud,mff, M.D.
Internal Medicine
Olympic Physicians. P.L.L.C.
(360)426-2500
www.olym piclYsicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Dimnm E. Vdikovl, M,D.
Intemal Medicine
Olympic Physicians. P.L.LC
(360)426-2500
www.olympicphysicians.com
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Timothy J. Wd,
Family Practice
Shelton Family M ljci
(360} 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice
Doris H, Wib, $'p'
Family Practice ,_.
Shelton Family MecliOm
(360) 426-2633
(360) 426-2653
Board Certified
Family Practice ..... --" " l
uenerm Hosplta
JrlCc. mhccJtCd
901 Mt Vv Ddve
(360:
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